Carbon dioxide affinity (“carboxophilicity”) of trivalent light metal pyrazolates†
Abstract
Trivalent group 3 and 13 light metal pyrazolates were synthesised and their reactivity towards CO2 was investigated. The homoleptic complex Al(pztBu2)3 reversibly inserts two molecules of CO2 to afford Al(CO2·pztBu2)2(pztBu2), exhibiting CO2 release only at elevated temperatures (>100 °C). In contrast, donor-stabilised Sc(pztBu2)3(thf) forms mono-inserted species [Sc(μ-CO2·pztBu2)(pztBu2)2]2, which already releases CO2 at ambient temperature and pressure and hence is isolable only at low temperature. For the yttrium complex Y(pztBu2)3(thf)2, insertion of CO2 is not observable at ambient temperature. The new homoleptic aluminium diisopropyl pyrazolate complex [Al(pziPr2)3]2 shows exhaustive CO2 insertion, while dimethyl pyrazolate could be isolated as the separated ion pair [Al(N,N′,N′′-Al{pzMe2}3Me)2][Al(pzMe2)3Me]. The scandium complex Sc(pztBu2)3(thf) performed best in the catalytic cycloaddition reaction of CO2 and epoxides, unveiling an inverse correlation of carboxophilicity ( CO2 affinity) and catalytic activity. Carboxophilicity is assessed using CO2-release temperature (via VT 1H NMR spectroscopy and thermogravimetric analysis).
- This article is part of the themed collection: 2024 Inorganic Chemistry Frontiers HOT articles